Most Helpful Girls

  • Oral contraception or the birth control pills if used as recommended, are up to +99 percent effective in preventing pregnancy, that means there is a very small risk of pregnancy. In most instances, women who become pregnant while taking oral contraceptives either miss one or more doses; take a dose at a time different from their normal time (i. e. in the evening instead of the morning); take medications such as some of the antibiotics that interfere with the way birth control pills work in your body; or have unprotected intercourse too soon after starting the pills. If you have started taking birth control pills within six days of the first day of your period, it is effective almost immediately. If you start at any other time, however, you need to take it for a full month before it is effective, and you must use another form of birth control until you have completed one full cycle of pills. While ejaculation during intercourse is, obviously, the most common reason for pregnancy, you can get pregnant even if your partner ejaculates outside your vagina but close to the vaginal entry or withdraws his penis just before ejaculation. That is because sperm, by their very nature, are pretty hardy swimmers. If you are ovulating and the sperm manage to make it from the vaginal entrance to your fallopian tubes, a pregnancy could certainly occur. Occasionally, even though a man has not ejaculated during intercourse, some semen may still escape from his penis during intercourse and it only takes one sperm and one egg—and one episode of sexual activity—to get pregnant. No method of contraception other than sterilization is 100 percent effective against pregnancy, the more precautions you take, the less likely you are to get pregnant. If you are not in a long-term, monogamous relationship, your partner should be using a condom anyway to protect you both against sexually transmitted diseases.
    As long as you have waited the proper amount of time the doctor recommend, and you are completely comfortable with it, you can enjoy it without any fear of getting pregnant. Sex without condom is much more pleasant compared to with condom, and it also increase intimacy by exchange of happy hormones during sex. Also, though the chance is very slim, you and your boyfriend should still talk about what the plan is in case of an unplanned pregnancy. If it is something that could cause life changing repercussions that you are not ready for, use condom to double up protection may be the best option for both of you. You may use the patch to regulate cycle and for the backup protection to give you peace of mind, but that is not the case for everyone. If you mean safe from pregnancy and sexually transmitted infections (STI) then it is safe to use condom otherwise abstinence is the only way to be 100% safe, but what is the fun in that? But take care of you periods and have fun. Good luck and be safe!

  • There is still some statistical chance you could become pregnant, but most women who take their birth control correctly will find it 100% effective.

    But these things don't protect you from sexually transmitted diseases. So, before you give up condoms, both of you should be tested for STDs.

Most Helpful Guys

  • Well, it is possible, but there is still a chance of becoming pregnant, no counterceptive is 100% safe. Thats why my partner and me always combine two of them (i. e. the pill plus a condom), then the chance is really really tiny (about 0.01%)

  • For sure. My girlfriend is on pill and I cum in her all time.

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What Girls & Guys Said

4 11
  • Yes, but it doesn't protect against STDs

  • Yes, but there is still a chance, unless either of you are infertile.

  • Absolutely.

  • Get sex education before sex.

    You shouldn't need to ask random stranger questions like this.

  • birth control is disgusting, I can smell it off girls

  • Yeah

  • well its implied yea lol

  • I guess so

  • Yes.

  • Duh.

  • Sure. Isn't that the point?

  • why else would you take it?

  • That’s a personal choice. If disease isn’t an issue and you’re willing to accept there’s a small chance of failure with any birth control method, then yeah, most couples probably ditch the condoms after getting reliable birth control.

  • I been on birth control since I was 16 and never had problems. Most all my bfs cum in me.

  • Yes!!